1. Russian Postmodernism: New Perspectives on Post-Soviet Culture
(with Alexander Genis and Slobodanka Vladiv-Glover, in the series Studies
in Slavic Literature, Culture, and Society, vol. 3). New York, Oxford:
Berghahn Books, 1999, 528 pp. (of 24 chapters in this book 16 are written
by this author). Hardcover and paperback editions.

2. After the Future: The Paradoxes of Postmodernism and Contemporary
Russian Culture (a volume in the series Critical Perspectives on Modern
Culture, with an introduction by Anesa Miller-Pogacar), Amherst: The University
of Massachusetts Press, 1995, 392 pp. Hardcover and paperback
editions.

"The Phoenix of Philosophy: On the Meaning and Significance of Contemporary
Russian Thought," ibid., 35-74.

"Hyper in 20th Century Culture: The Dialectics of Transition from Modernism
to Postmodernism" (transl. from Russian by Slobodanka Vladiv-Glover, revised
and extended by the author), Postmodern Culture. An Electronic Journal
of Interdisciplinary Criticism. Published by North Carolina State
University, Oxford University Press, and the University of Virginia's Institute
for Advanced Technology in the Humanities. V.6 N.2. January 1996,
61 paragraphs. Reprinted in Left Curve (Oakland, CA), No.21, 1997, 5-16.

"The Origins and Meaning of Russian Postmodernism", in Re-entering
the Sign: Articulating New Russian Culture, ed. by Ellen Berry and Anesa
Miller-Pogacar, University of Michigan Press, 1995, 25-47.

"A Catalog of the New Poetries," ibid., 208-211.

"Ivan Soloviev's Reflections on Eros," in Genders, 22, a
special issue Postcommunism and the Body Politic, ed. by Ellen Berry, New
York and London: New York University Press, 1995, 252-266.

The Russian Philosophy of National Spirit: Conservatism and Traditionalism
[book format] Washington, D.C.: National Council for Soviet and East European
Research, 1994, 23 pp.

The Significance of Russian Philosophy [book format], Washington, D.C.:
National Council for Soviet and East European Research, 1994, 10 pp.

"Good-bye to Objects, or, the Nabokovian in Nabokov," in A Small Alpine
Form: Studies in NabokovŐs Short Fiction, ed. by Gene Barabtarlo and Charles
Nicol, New York: Garland Publishers (Garland Reference Library of the Humanities,
Vol. 1580), 1993, 217-224.